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First-Year Experience

Scribner Seminar Program
Course Description

Narcocultures: Drugs, Power and Culture in Latin America

Instructor(s): María Lander, World Languages and Literatures

In the US these days Latin America is inextricably linked with the illegal drug trade, and with the US's so-called war on drugs. The media routinely relate scenes of mass carnage brought about by drug traffickers and stereotypical images of "narcos" abound in television, movies, and literature. The lived reality of the drug trade in Latin America is indeed violent but infinitely more complex than perhaps the US media is able to represent, and has produced a large body of film, literature, and music that attempts to make sense of this brutal reality. We will study these works to show how narcoculture has indelibly shaped the societies it inhabits, transforming the economic, political, and cultural life of entire cities and even countries (Medellín, Colombia, or Ciudad Juárez, Mexico), and producing waves of unspeakable violence in both the US and Latin America. Students will approach "narcocultures" from a range of interdisciplinary perspectives. They will also learn to study cultural productions through the parallel study of cultural artifacts with complementary readings on ethics, politics, law, and sociology. Further, students will be required to think critically and challenge the preconceptions that they might have regarding the course topics.

 

Course Offered